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Enduring Values for Contemporary Issues: Integrating Buddhist and Jewish Morality Into Contemporary Management Models

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Abstract

In today’s multi-cultural world and global economy, attention is often focused on the diversity of cultural values and practices and the need for management approaches to take these differing cultural environments into account. While there is much to be valued in this approach, the focus is often on how to navigate through distinct cultural practices in order to achieve a singular business aim, which falls within the current neoliberal paradigm of global trade. In addition, by focusing on differences in cultural practices, rather than on similarities in underlying values, this approach fails to utilize an important way to achieve a greater degree of global integration in management. Despite striking cultural differences, it is possible to identify some enduring values that underlie what often appear to be quite discrete value paradigms, especially by looking at value paradigms that have endured for centuries, even millennia. This paper proposes to explore the values embedded in two such value paradigms or religious traditions, zen buddhism and Judaism, describing crucial core values in each and comparing and contrasting their ethical frameworks, in order to be able to evaluate their utility in today’s world and especially their significance for creating a more holistic, inclusive, and responsible management framework. The paper will begin by explicating the set of foundational values in each religious tradition. For example, zen buddhism, especially as expressed by Vietnamese monk Thich Nhan Hanh, utilizes the concepts of engaged mindfulness and inter-being to demonstrate the ways in which all global issues are linked together, and the collective responsibility that all humans bear for the state of our planet and the beings who live on it. This approach is inherently holistic and inclusive, and requires a management approach that takes into account the moral responsibility that we all carry. Likewise, the Jewish tradition, while using quite different terminology, also lays out a holistic and inclusive moral vision. Key concepts include the values of Tikkum Olam, to repair the world, and Tsedakah, which literally means justice or righteousness, but is commonly used to indicate charitable giving. The first value, to repair the world, emphasizes the collective moral responsibility to heal whatever damage has been done to the world in order to make the it a better place for all. It does not matter who has done the damage; what matters is each person’s obligation to improve the status quo, under the assumption that all our fates are linked together. The second value, justice and charity, is also considered to be a moral obligation, not simply a voluntary act of charity. The emphasis here is on anonymous giving, done in order to help others and without any expectation of receiving some benefit, such as positive publicity. As a moral obligation, it is not something that one should benefit from. Thus, the concept of tsekakah also emphasizes the inter-connectedness of all humanity. In addition, in the Torah, there are a series of rules about how to deal with others in business as well as the obligation, during harvest-time, to leave some grain in the fields for the less fortunate. In all, we see a focus on being mindful of others, on seeing our fates as interconnected, as in zen buddhism. The last section of the paper will explore some of the ways in which these moral imperatives can be utilized to undergird and buttress a more holistic, inclusive and responsible management approach. Some management models already include moral imperatives, such as corporal social responsibility, and this section will explore in greater detail how the above concepts have been more fully integrated into current management models.

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Notes

  1. Heschel (1962), chapter 11, Justice .

  2. ibid., p. 195

  3. ibid., p. 197

  4. ibid., p. 198

  5. ibid.

  6. ibid., p. 199

  7. ibid., p. 204

  8. ibid., p. 201

  9. The Torah is the first five books of the bible.

  10. The Mishnah is one of two sets of commentaries (the Talmud being the other) on the Torah. It dates to about 200 AD.

  11. Use of the term Tikkun Olam is especially strong within the Reform Jewish movement and the Conservative movements, and least utilized among the more ritually religious Orthodox Jews, who put more emphasis on fulfilling the 613 mitzvot, or commandments, including Tsedakah.

  12. It was later renamed the Brandeis-Bardin Institute.

  13. Jewish Virtual library, jewishvirtuallibrary.org

  14. ibid.

  15. There are four major branches in modern Judaism (orthodox, the most ritually observant, conservative, which conserves quite a number of the rituals, but tried to adapt traditional Judaism to live in the modern world, and reform Judaism, which adopted social justice as a major focus in lieu of ritual observance. Reform Judaism, which has swung back a bit more towards appreciation of ritual observance, had its origins in the 1800s in Germany, when Jews were adapting to life outside of the ghettos. The fourth branch of modern Judaism is Reconstructionist, which, while not believing in a personal God, follows Jewish rituals and traditions.

  16. Buber (1958)

  17. ibid., p. 11.

  18. ibid., p 6.

  19. Cohen (2012)

  20. ibid., p 9.

  21. ibid., 89.

  22. Fishkoff (2010), p 281.

  23. Hanh (1998), p. 8.

  24. Kornfield (2008), p 23.

  25. Ibid., p. 356.

  26. Ibid., p. 155.

  27. Hanh (1991).

  28. Thich Nhat Hanh, “The Heart of Buddha’s Teaching,” p. 221.

  29. Thich Nhat Hanh, Peace is Every Step,” p. 91.

  30. Chodron (2002), p. 112; see also Chodron (2003) and Chodron (2007).

  31. ibid., p. 118.

  32. See Boehrer (2000), Heckscher and Donnellon (eds.). (1994) and Mele (2004).

  33. Lechner and John (2014).

  34. It was particularly noted during the Salvador Allende presidency of 1970–1973, when the issue of worker empowerment was at the fore of the political conflict there. See Oppenheim (2007).

  35. See, for example, Tomic (1988) and Castillo (1963).

  36. Stark (2001), p.69.

  37. ibid., p. 70

  38. Winkler (2014). (blogs.wsj.com)

  39. See Buck and Villines (2007).

  40. wired.com

  41. See the documentary Food Chains, which gives the history of the organization of the Immokalee, Florida tomato farm workers.

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Oppenheim, L.H. Enduring Values for Contemporary Issues: Integrating Buddhist and Jewish Morality Into Contemporary Management Models. Philosophy of Management 16, 55–68 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1007/s40926-016-0036-8

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